Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Apr 1965, p. 5

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church rectory. A note .was Yeft by the father, aecording}to po- Dressed in their Eastern sters were found in finery and carrying gifts from policemen, Debbie, 3, and brother, Chris, 2, stand _ lice, saying he was "@ very in Brooklyn police station pic paral on chi And 3 vere § in New York Sunday. Police = shoiter, Family name was say children were abandon- ed by their father. Young- Daddy Abandons Two Tots With Loving Care, Remorse NEW YORK (AP)--A fa- ther who abandoned his tiny son and daughter on Easter changed his mind hours later and went to a police station. He identified himself as Charles Miller, 23, a truck driver. He was charged with abandonment and held infa cell for arraignment. The fa- ther said he and 'his wife are separated. Left in the waiting room of a Brooklyn church rectory wearing new Easter finery, were Chris 2, and Debbie, 3. The father stole away from his two blond, blue eyed youngsters as a maid went to call the church pastor. He left behind a note saying he was "A very sick man' whose wife had left him. not made available. --(AP Wirephoto) said. "I love you both. I'll miss you so. I love you, Deb- bie and Chris. I'm sorry daddy has to do this to yoy. Maybe some day we can be together again. Please God, take care of my kids, I love them both. Their daddy is very sick." At first, the children cried, then Debbie momentarily put aside her cares to take off her new white shoes, which pinched her feet Soon they were given fluffy toy bunnies and Easter candy by policemen at a_ precinct headquarters to which they had been taken. But Debbie refused to believe that the father she loved would aban- don her. 'Your daddy will be back As the two youngsters soon," said a policeman. watched. wide - eyedpolice "You're a big girl. Don't called to the Roman Catholic cry.' rectory read the father's note. "I'm a baby," the girl re- HE'S SORRY plied. "And my daddy lost "Im sorry sweethearts," it me." Marion Anderson Sings A Triumphant Farewell NEW YORK (AP) -- tea | Anderson sang a triumphant audience that seemed deter-/filled all the major concert mined not to let her retire--or/halls of the world even leave the hall. WEEKEND OF VIOLENCE AND VANDALISM BATHURST, N.S.W. (ReW- ers) -- Every available poli€e- man in the area was on duty in this Australian town Sunda: after hundreds of lester eted teen - agers went on an Easter weekend rampage of violence and vandalism. | The teen-agers roared into Bathurst, 100 miles west of Sydney, on motorcycles Friday night. Several hotels in the town, packed with Easter holiday - makers, closed three hours early Saturday night after the youths smashed furniture, light fixtures and hundreds of beer glasses, and started dozens, of fist-fights. The youths also ran riot in| the town's main park, wrecking a fern garden, ripping out Teen-agers Riot In Aussie Town shrubs and flowers and destroy- ing several statues. _ ' More than 50 youths were ar- rested on charges ranging from drunkenness, offensive behav- ior and using indecent language 'to theft and drunken driving. 56 ARRESTED BRIGHTON, England -- (Reut- ers) -- Police Sunday night mounted all-night patrols at this south coast resort town in a clampdown on "Mods" and "Rockers" after 56 teen - agers were arrested, It was estimated that 1,000 of the 'Mods'? (moderns), teen- agers in. Edwardian - style clothes, and the rival leather- jacketed "Rockers" arrived in the town during the Easter holi- day weekend. There wera, no massed clashes between the rival groups on the seafront as there were last year, and police de- scribed outbreaks of rowdiness as "a series of isolated inci- dents." Hundreds of teen - agers on motor - scooters were riding around Brighton till late Sun- day. night. Many prepared to sleep on the beach. Sunday morning police broke up a crowd of about 00 youths and girls near the pier, where! pebbles were thrown at' police officers. In Blackpool, northern Eng- land, police prevented possible teen-age clashes by searching nearly 700 youths.as they ar- rived Sunday, confiscating about 12 studded belts. EDMONTON (CP) -- Joseph} Percival, 37, a former Vancou- ver city policeman, and James McDougall, 32, also of Vancou- ver, will appear in police court} here Tuesday, charged in con-| |nection with theft of $1,250,000) lin mutilated currency from a| | Vancouver railway warehouse. | The men were arrested in| Edmonton Saturday night and) charged with possession of! stolen property--the bills taken) by four men from a Canadian| Pacific Railway warehouse in Vancouver Feb. 11. Police here have recovered |about $12,000 of the money. | Police were put on the alert! George Ex-Policeman, Mate Charged Kennan Saturday when a city hotel phoned to say mutilated money had been passed on their prem- ises. Police warned other hotels and liquor outlets in the city. Later, a motor hotel called to say two men had attempted to use mutilated money. Police arrested Percival and McDoug- all together. Thieves took three boxes--/ each weighing 300 pounds-- which contained old currency| that -was to be shipped from) Vancouver to the mint in Ot-) tawa to be destroyed. Three half-inch holes were punched in) each bill. -------- | 'Backs Pearson MONTREAL (CP) -- George F. Kennan, former United |States ambassador to the Soviet) Union and to Yugoslavia, sup-| ports Prime Minister Pearson's jeall for suspension of US.| |bombing raids on North Viet) \Nam in an effort to improve) ithe climate for negotiations. Dr. Kennan, in Montreal Sat- urday en route to England, termed Mr, Pearson's sugges- tion "a constructive one, which I hope soon." me "The conflict in Viet Nam is| of such seriousness, it is Prop-| erly a source of concern to our) friends, and we need the advice} of our friends," he said. } Mr. Kennan, who resigned in} July, 1963, as ambassador to Yugoslavia, is a_ lecturer at Princeton University and asso- ciated with the Institute of Ad-/ vanced Studies. Former Mayor Of Waterloo, Her performance was siesiadl Frank Bauer Dies At 51 ntjand under perfect control, al-| farewell concert at Carnegie|though she rarely turned loose} Hall Sunday before a_ sellout/the big contralto voice that had) | mayor and a member of the fa-|mer star forward with BoSton|home. WATERLOO (CP)--Frank N. Bauer, 51, former Waterloo hockey family, here Sunday} |mous Bauer died in hospital Mr. Bauer was a brother of Robert T. (Bobby) Bauer, for- Bruins of the National Hockey League who died last Septem- At the end, the applause was| lber at the age of 49, also after Miss Anderson, nearing 60, |s0 frenzied and sustained that! =~ anf oly vd mage had to sing almost another; ago. She looked Sunday almost) C°"Cert in encores. like a- lady receiving audience! After she had returned to her| ovations at the. start of a glor- dressing room, someone dis- rag ig eg is al-stewiaie covered that the audience was backed poise and her odie spot still sitting and applauding. So face looked more youthful, less strained. 300 Youths Help Poor TIJUANA, Mexico for a few more bows. | RCAF Locates | | Small Plane TRENTON, Ont. (CP)--RCAF search and rescue headquart- "ers said Sunday a small plane (AP) Three hundred California missing in bushland north of! youths spent their Easter vaca-\;ake' Superior with two men tion laboring among the poor in ahoard was found late: Satur- the slums of this border city.\qay on a small lake 135 miles They pounded, painted andinortheast of Port Arthur. dug, and created a new, 16-) piiot Aubrey Robinson of crib hospital that will provide yanitouwadge, about 165 miles a measure of medical care for northeast of the Lakehead, and the ailing infants of a poverty-/an unidentified trapper he was stricken neighborhood in the'fiying into the bush were not western hills. injured. Hee The hospital, sponsored by, The search began®* : , ; 2 , 2 Be pegan *Saturday Profject Amigos, is part of.a morning. when the aircraft: dis- 10 building complex that haSappeared on a 30-mile west- grown up during the last four'warg flight to Killala Lake years as a result of volunteer|trom Manitouwadge. The plane effort on both sides of the bor-\ wa. slightly damaged der. oneal é es "We like to call it a free- - sate y 'wheeling, non - denominational DEAD OFFICER HONORED people - to - people project sup ported mostly by faith,"' says Elmer Ellis of Alhambra, Calif..who was killed last Ellis was in Tijuana all week while trying to arrest a gun- supervising the work gangs of man, will be honored by a bust) students from several Califor-in the cathedral of this West- nia colleges and church groups. morland city. [St tt TUXEDO RENTALS © We carry a complete line of Syd SILVER'S formal wear and accessories for ol! occa- sions Free Booklet on formal wear and wedding procedures. Pick up your copy to-dey. "A Name For Fine Clothes" 2314 Simeoce South 723-7974 Open Fri. Evening Until 9 P.M after a heart attack. Real Caouette a heart attack, Another brother is Rev. David W. Bauer, coach of Canada's hockey team at the CARLISLE, England (CP) --| Police constable George Russell, | January) | e 8 11964 winter Olympics at Inns-| | Quits Hospital bruck, Austria. oF iad A native of Waterloo, Mr.| HULL, Que. (CP)--Creditiste pauer had served for six years| Leader Real Caouette was dis-/a, a ¢ity alderman and was she dashed back to the stage|charged from hospital Satur-| mayor of the city in 1954-55. Hel illness. |day, six days after he collapsed) was a graduate of St. Michael's) ee arnt ca non, 6 os Be 'ove e padepe |Toronto as well as the Lowell res ut his office says Ne/Textile Institute, Lowell, Mass. ee ee He was a director of Bauer's | se e Limited and for 30 years had returns from the Easter TeceSS\heen superintendent of the| -- Conmotie has had a dia yep emt yarn and twine tex-| Mr. ~\tile division. betic condition for several) --___ years. { - {century B.C. The fragments,| |bearing Aramaic _inscriptions,| | were found at Tel Es Sa'idiyeh) in the Gkor district of Jordan.| Group Uncovers Ancient Tablet = |,,""ianmoud "AtAbedi acting) AMMAN, Jordan (Reuters)--|director of Jordan's antiquities) 100 Poisoned Blame Cake | Alberta, Accidents Kill 52 In 78 Hours By THE CANADIAN PRESS Accidents killed at least 52 persons across Canada during the 78-hour Easter weekend, 39 of them on the highways. The traffic toll fell one short of the total of 40 predicted by the Canadian Highway Safety Council, - A survey by The Canadian Press covered the period from 6 p.m. Thursday to midnight local times Sunday. The 52 deaths equalled last year's Eas- ter weekend total, but was well below the 1957 record-of 70. Seven persons died in fires, four persons were drowned, one man was killed in a hunt- ing accident and another died in a train derailment. Ontario reported 18 traffic fatalities, Quebec six, New Brunswick and Alberta four each, Saskatchewan three and Manitoha and British Columbia |two each. Three persons died in fires in British Columbia, while Ontario reported two and Nova Scotia and Saskatchewan one each. There were two drownings each in New Brunswick and A Canadian Pacific TORONTO (CP) -- About 100)|Railway baggageman was children and some adults were|killed in a railway derailment taken to hospital Sunday with|near Terrace Bay, Ont. food poisoning caused by a cream-filled Easter degsert. Hospital emergency depart- ments were filled with patients while police and public health inspectors traced the poisoning. Police said all victims had eaten cannoli, a cream layer cake which is a_ traditional Easter treat for families of Italian origin. Hospital spokesmen said none of the patients was seriously ill. for observations. 'Plame Patient As Five Slain TONAWANDA, N.Y. (AP)--A| saw No fatalities were reported in Newfoundland 'or Prince Ed- ward Island. The survey does not include natural deaths, industrial acci- dents, known slayings or sui- cides. | Burglar Alarms | Are All False e y DETROIT (AP)--A chorus of Several children were detained pyrglar alarms rang in Easter Sunday at 7:30 a.m. in a group "lof Detroit Suburbs. A harbinger of spring -- a robin--apparently was respon- sible and lost its life. Wayne County Sheriff James Spalding, out driving, said he le robin fall dead from a 37 - year - old mental patient,| high-voltage transformer. An in- home on a trial parently killed his basis, , ap-|stant before, Spalding said he wife and|saw a flash and puff of smoke, three children early Saturday) indicating a short circuit that and then took his own life, po-! set lice said. the U.S. implements) Police Capt. Robert Ensmin-| ger said the bodies of Thurber Cassidy, his wife, Agnes, 36, and their daughters, Beverly, 5, Deborah, 8, and Barbara, 10, were found in their. blood-spat- tered home in this city near Buffalo. Police said they found a pen- cilled note on a kitchen shelf, reading: "God told mé to." All of the dead were pyjama- clad, police said. Police said Mrs, Cassidy died of multiple stab wounds and preliminary investigation jindicated she was the only one! |who put up a struggle. A hatchet, a plumber's wrench and a hammer, all blood-stained, were' found in the Mrs. R. Patterson Dies In North off alarms in business places. BACKACHE and RHEUMATISM Pain After 21 twice as many Women as men are made miserable by common urinary irritation caused by a germ, Escheric! Coli, To quickly combat the secondary aches, muscular pains and 'bed slee} caused by Kidney and Bladder irritations, pA J 2 Bide Crete with & glass of wai es daily Jor @ few days. CYSTEX isa cleaning ur! septic, also an analgesic pain for Rheumatism, Sciatica Pains, Backache, ahd muscular pains, Get OYSTEX from drusgeist, Feel better OWEN SOUND (CP) -- Mrs PLANNING A re Roland Patterson, wife of a former Deputy-Speaker of the Ontario legislature, died Sun- day in hospital after a lengthy A native of Clarksburg, Ont., Mrs. Patterson moved to Owen Sound after her marriage. in 1907. She was a past matron of the Owen Sound chapter of the Eastern Star and a past regent of the Earl Grey chapter, Im- perial Order Daughters of the Empire. Her husband, a former Owen Sound mayor, was Liberal member of the legislature for Grey North for 10 years from 1935. | | | } © BANQUET © CONVENTION © MEETING First Class Facilities For 20 to 400 Guests Quality Service Experienced Staff RESERVE YOUR FUNCTION NOW! 723-4641 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, April 19, 1965 AT BORDEAUX JAIL, MONTREAL MONTREAI, (CP)--The sui- cide of a prisoner charged in a national monuments was. fol: lowed Sunday night by a noisy demonstration at Bordeaux Jai! in Montreal. Gilles Legault, 31, a type- lwriter 'sepairman charged with Iconspiracy to provide dynamite to persons planning to blow up the Statue of Liberty, the Lib- erty Bell and the Washington Monument, killed himself in cells. A spokesman for the Quebec attorney - general's department would confirm only that the prisoner killed himself after treatment for wounds inflicted by a fellow prisoner in the trial) ward. "There is no bingo at Bor- deaux," the spokesman said, referring to the shouting at the prison Sunday night which gave rise to speculation there was a riot, known in Quebec as a| "bingo." The prisoners started chant- ing and yelling at dinner time, about the same time as Le- gault's suicide. they kept it up) The British government pro- poses to increase its Arts Coun- cil grant by £665,000 to £2,815,- 000 ($8,445,000) in 1965-66. ARTS SUBSIDY RISES | when locked in their' cells and there were reports they were plot to dynamite United States}playing with matches in at- empts to provoke their guards. UNK NOT CONFIRMED There was no confirmation that the events were linked al- though \ prisoners .have previ- ously= onstrated their unrest in the e of such incidents. Legault was treated at St. Luc Hospital in downtown Montreal earlier Sunday for Stab wounds inflicted by a fel- low prisoner. Others in the trial ward in- clude Raymond Sabourin, 21, an office clerk, and Jean Gi- roux, 20, a post office worker, both of whom have been in the same conspi- of feuding among prisoners in the trial ward. Officials did not disclose how Legault killed himself. Jail Demonstration Follows Suicide Michelle Saunier, 31, was re- leased on $5,000 bail last Wed- nesday while awaiting continu- ation of her preliminary hear- ing in the same case. arged cy. There have been reports 7 HELP KIDNEYS PASS" feel better, ' Ask for Dodd's Kidney Pills, at any drug counter, Used successfully by millions for over 70 years. ! €herney's FURNITURE WORLD See YOUR MONEY EARNS More At |* on Chequing Accounts from the |day the account is opened. Paid |Querterly on minimum monthly balance. No chorge for cheques written, ee , a ri on ee Ae on Savings Accounts. 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